thanks to bigpaws and hata_ph I can now access my cd drive and have already installed the MS Win Fonts from a backup CD. Sound is played too, but not with Xine:-/ I've tried gXine from the slackware repo - didn't start. I would like to install a newer XineLib (V1.1x is out), but didn't find such with gslapt. This tool seems a bit too primitive - there is no command for continue search?! Perhaps I should install XineLib, gXine and more apps with vpackager and gcc? I don't understand why binary packages downloaded from elsewhere often don't run - this is Linux? But I will build the packages because I will stick to this Linux. I like it more than my old MS Win 2000.Another minor bug seeming to me is that the Vector-Docs on the default desktop are only loaded with Seamonkey browser, although Firefox is selected in the "Preffered applycation" applet. Dragging the Vector docs into a Firefox Window displays only:

I appreciate the usually friendly responses here very much, but when I f. e. say "no K3B" after noticing that it's far below the Ashampoo burning suite for MS Win in usability and functionality - believe me, please. I've not yet tested CD burning with the other Linux programs.I will continue these little VL experience comments later.

Xine and MPlayer usually play well for any normal music, video and CD. Did you encounter any error using it?

VL is still a small comunity if compare to other big linux distro. All the packages in VL repo may not be 100% all up to date. For any new packages that not available in the repo you can either package it yourself or request it from the VL repo.

To my knowledge, selecting preferred browser through the applet is merely creating a launcher for you using your favorite browser. Not sure there is a easier way to do this, but it's how I always do it:

In a terminal as regular user launch this command:

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mousepad .bashrc

Then scroll down to about line 33. Can't tell you exactly since I don't remember if my .bashrc is modified.You will see this, or something very close:

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## Set this for your first choiceexport BROWSER=seamonkey#export BROWSER=firefox#export BROWSER=opera

Change it to this:

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## Set this for your first choice#export BROWSER=seamonkeyexport BROWSER=firefox#export BROWSER=opera

In case you can't see the difference, I added a comment (#) to the seamonkey line, and removed the comment in front of the firefox line. In case you aren't familiar with coding, the comment makes a line "invisible" to the shell that is processing it.Save the file and log out, then log in again, or reboot, whatever is easier for you.Firefox will now be available for all applications or shortcuts that call for the default browser ($BROWSER).

I don't understand why binary packages downloaded from elsewhere often don't run - this is Linux?

Probably because of missing dependencies.Is this Linux? Yes. You have lots of software in the repository that other people tried to make sure runs fine, and no need to go to any website and download stuff...That's cool, no? If the stuff you want is not there, ask for it in the package requests subforum. Someone will likely jump along and help out.

Slackware packages will almost always work, but you need to make sure you have the necessary dependencies. That's why the repository is better, and sorts the dependencies out for you.

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I would like to install a newer XineLib (V1.1x is out), but didn't find such with gslapt

You'll find 1.1.14 in the testing repository. In gslapt, go to edit > preferences > sources and enable the testing repo.A lot of the software in the VL repo is in the testing directory.... usually, it runs fine; I never have any problems. But yes, it's being tested, so it's less risk-free than the extra directory. You can always downgrade it if you find some problem with a "testing" package. And report the problem, of course.

I don't think you're lying. But it would take a lot more than a burning suite to make me go back to windows. Especially when k3b rips audio cd's, burns audio, images and data, and burns cd's and dvd's. I'm happy with it, and don't have to spend $49.99 in Ashampoo.

Certainly, not all software in Linux is the best you can get. Sometimes software that's only available for other platforms is better... I have lots of friends who would never abandon Photoshop, for example. That's up to the software developers... Say, if you want games, Windows is definitely the best OS for that.

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But I will build the packages because I will stick to this Linux

That's a great way to learn stuff.... you'll be mastering configure options in no time. But, honestly, sometimes building software can be a pain.Try the repos first (including testing), a package request, vpackager, slackware packages.... after you try these, you;ll probably have your needs catered for.

Xine and MPlayer usually play well for any normal music, video and CD. Did you encounter any error using it?

I could play a music CD with XMMS, but when I tried the same CD again some hours later, the sound got chopped after the first second. xine only causes a repeated mechanical noise from the CD drive with the same CD.Thus the only reliable way for sound so far is the command "play *.wav" in xterm which indicates that the soundchip from ESS was configured properlyAny help is very appreciated.

Put a music CD in the drive, or play an mp3 file with xmms, open a terminal, type alsamixer and unmute any channels you need with the "m" key. Use arrow keys to incr/decr levels. Read "man alsamixer" for more info....

Logged

"As people become more intelligent they care less for preachers and more for teachers". Robert G. Ingersoll

I would like to install a newer XineLib (V1.1x is out), but didn't find such with gslapt

You'll find 1.1.14 in the testing repository. In gslapt, go to edit > preferences > sources and enable the testing repo.A lot of the software in the VL repo is in the testing directory.... usually, it runs fine; I never have any problems. But yes, it's being tested, so it's less risk-free than the extra directory. You can always downgrade it if you find some problem with a "testing" package. And report the problem, of course.

I don't think you're lying. But it would take a lot more than a burning suite to make me go back to windows. Especially when k3b rips audio cd's, burns audio, images and data, and burns cd's and dvd's. I'm happy with it, and don't have to spend $49.99 in Ashampoo.

The 49.99 price is only for offering the burning suite with a great discount. Usually the burning suite costs only 10 EUR (V8 now) and I got V6 that suited my needs for free from Ashampoo. The service is great too.

The 49.99 price is only for offering the burning suite with a great discount. Usually the burning suite costs only 10 EUR (V8 now) and I got V6 that suited my needs for free from Ashampoo. The service is great too.

Maybe you can run it with wine... But if it's not on their compatibility list, the chances are slim.

To my knowledge, selecting preferred browser through the applet is merely creating a launcher for you using your favorite browser. Not sure there is a easier way to do this, but it's how I always do it:

In a terminal as regular user launch this command:

Quote

mousepad .bashrc

Then scroll down to about line 33. Can't tell you exactly since I don't remember if my .bashrc is modified.You will see this, or something very close:

Quote

## Set this for your first choice#export BROWSER=seamonkeyexport BROWSER=firefox#export BROWSER=opera

In case you can't see the difference, I added a comment (#) to the seamonkey line, and removed the comment in front of the firefox line. In case you aren't familiar with coding, the comment makes a line "invisible" to the shell that is processing it.Save the file and log out, then log in again, or reboot, whatever is easier for you.Firefox will now be available for all applications or shortcuts that call for the default browser ($BROWSER).Let me know if you have troubles

I followed your tip, edited the .bashrc, logged out and logged in - no change. The Vector-Doc launcher on the desktop always starts seamonkey. Mysterious, but I won't dig into the launcher code. To me, the launcher file seems really complicated. It at last passes the index.html of the docs to Seamonkey - wouldn't it be easier to drop a vector-doc.sh "browser vectordocpath/index.html" on the desktop? Not possible?The second bug is, what is the XFCE-applet for selecting the preferred browser good for, if I then still have to edit the .bashrc? The applet should do this.

[To me, the launcher file seems really complicated. It at last passes the index.html of the docs to Seamonkey - wouldn't it be easier to drop a vector-doc.sh "browser vectordocpath/index.html" on the desktop? Not possible?

The story about the vectordoc launcher continues. I've changed the command field in XFCE's "Edit Launcher" dialog to browser /usr/doc/VLHelpCenter/index.htmlbut again Seamonkey is launched. The same command in the XTerm starts Firefox. Not logic. Annoying.Any help is very appreciated.

sorry.. it works for me, I just right click the icon, open with mousepad, edit and save...firefox opens the doc via the xfce desktop icon rather than seamonkey...must be a special set up..ok..i'm going... [Desktop Entry]Version=1.0Encoding=UTF-8Type=ApplicationName=Vector-DocsComment=web browserCategories=Application;Exec=firefox /usr/doc/VLHelpCenter/index.htmlIcon=globe-bubbleTerminal=falseStartupNotify=false